For years, the CIA has categorically denied the existence of secret prisons—or black sites—on U.S. soil. However, a now-deleted list of government-owned properties suggests that the agency may have indeed owned a facility used for secretive operations.
The list included government properties that the General Services Administration, at the direction of the Trump administration’s DOGE, planned to sell. Among the properties on the list was a highly sensitive complex in Northern Virginia long tied to CIA operations.
The GSA published the list on Thursday but quickly took it down the next day, according to Wired and Bloomberg.
“Obviously, someone did no research about the long and well-documented history of this property,” said Jeff McKay, chair of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors. “Normally a site like this wouldn’t be outed, so to speak, but everyone knows it’s here except, apparently, the people who put this list together.”
A GSA source told Wired that DOGE’s inclusion of the building was surprising. “There have been rumors swirling that some of the buildings identified house classified CIA space,” the source said, adding: “the release of ‘non-core properties’ was especially surprising, as this nebulous language has not been historically used.” […]
— Read More: headlineusa.com
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